The 60-Second Overview
The Carlyle answers a question most Ponte Vedra condos never ask: what if the building worked for you? Forty-seven residences in one four-story building at 600 Ponte Vedra Boulevard at Corona Road, built in 1995, with a staffed concierge at the front desk, a gated entrance, interior hotel-style hallways, two assigned garage spaces and a private storage unit per residence, and The Lodge & Club directly next door.
Be precise about what it is not: oceanfront. The building sits on the west side of the Boulevard, across from the beach access and the Lodge. Top-floor units can pick up ocean views over the Lodge roofline, and the north side looks across lakes and marsh. What you trade in frontage you recover in services, parking, and price per square foot relative to the true oceanfront regimes.
Plans run roughly 1,075 to 2,751 square feet, mostly two- and three-bedrooms with balconies, high ceilings, and gas fireplaces in many units. Dated third-party records show trades from the low $700Ks in 2020 to $1,325,000, about $790 per square foot, for a designer-renovated corner that closed in December 2025 (NEFMLS via Coldwell Banker).
Most PVB condos sell a location. The Carlyle sells a staff, a gate, two garage spaces, and the Lodge next door, then adds the location.
Fees and the Association: The Real Underwriting
The Carlyle's fee picture is one line: the association fee, with no CDD underneath it. But that line carries more than most, because it funds a staffed concierge desk, gated security, and the building itself. Service buildings have service budgets; do not benchmark the fee against an unstaffed walk-up and call it expensive without reading what it buys.
The 2026 diligence is era-specific. A 1995-built coastal condominium falls under Florida's post-Surfside regime: milestone structural inspections, reserve studies, and the funding plans behind them. Lenders now read these documents as carefully as buyers should, and a building's inspection status and reserve posture move both financability and price.
The Concierge Layer: What the Desk Actually Does
The Carlyle's calling card is a personal concierge at the front desk who checks in guests, monitors the gated entrance, and assists homeowners. In a market where almost every condo building hands you a fob and a phone number, a staffed desk changes daily life: packages received, vendors met, guests greeted, the building watched while you are away.
That last point is why The Carlyle works so well as a lock-and-leave. Second-home owners get what gated walk-ups cannot offer: a human who knows the building and notices what changes. Combine the desk with interior hallways, the gate, two garage spaces, and a storage unit, and the building functions like a boutique hotel that happens to be owned by its residents.
The honest caveat: a residential concierge is not a hotel staff, and staffing is a budget decision the association makes each year. Confirm current desk hours and the exact service scope before you let the word concierge do too much work in your underwriting.
The Lodge & Club Next Door: The Building's Resort Wing
The Carlyle's second structural advantage is its neighbor. The Lodge & Club, the AAA Four Diamond oceanfront boutique hotel that opened in 1989, sits directly adjacent, with oceanfront rooms and suites, two heated pools, a fitness center, and multiple restaurants. For Carlyle owners who join, the Lodge functions as the resort amenities the building itself deliberately does not carry: the pool, the gym, the dining room, and 66 oceanfront guest rooms for overflow visitors.
Membership is the detail to nail down. The Lodge & Club is a separate membership decision, not a deed right, though some past Carlyle listings have included a membership initiation with the sale. Confirm exactly what conveys with any specific unit, and confirm current membership categories, pricing, and availability with the club before you write the offer, not after.
The beach itself is the third neighbor: access is across the Boulevard, a short walk from the lobby. You are not on the dune line, but you are close enough that the morning walk is a routine, not an outing.
The Residences: Plans, Views, and Renovation Math
Inside, The Carlyle runs from a single 1,075-square-foot one-bedroom plan up to a 2,751-square-foot four-bedroom, with the great middle of the building in two- and three-bedroom layouts. The interiors are gracious by 1990s condo standards: high ceilings, large windows, balconies on every unit, and gas fireplaces in many living rooms.
Two variables drive price. The first is the view side: east-facing upper floors can catch ocean over the Lodge, the north side reads lake and marsh, and corner units collect both light and the premium. The second is renovation vintage: the bones date to 1995, and the spread between original finishes and a designer renovation is the difference between the $700K-era comps and the December 2025 corner that closed at $1,325,000.
Price the renovation honestly. A mid-$800s original-condition unit plus a full coastal-cost remodel can land above a renovated alternative, and in a 47-unit building you may wait a year for either to list.
Schools: Resale Fuel Even for Right-Sizers
The Carlyle is zoned to the Ponte Vedra feeder pattern of the St. Johns County district: Ponte Vedra Palm Valley/Rawlings Elementary, Alice B. Landrum Middle, and Ponte Vedra High. Many Carlyle owners are past the school years, but the zone still matters, because it is a meaningful share of why the next buyer pays the premium. Verify current assignments for the specific unit, and remember Bolles and Episcopal beach campuses are minutes away for the private-school crowd.
What Living Here Is Actually Like
The rhythm is Boulevard living with a staff: the concierge greets the morning, the beach walk is across the street, the Lodge pool or gym is next door for members, and Sawgrass Village errands run in under ten minutes. Forty-seven units is small enough that the desk knows the residents and the board is a known quantity.
The seasonal rhythm
The Carlyle mixes year-round residents with second-home owners, so the building breathes with the seasons: fuller in spring, during THE PLAYERS, and through the holidays, quieter in late summer. The rules keep it a residence, not a rental machine; advertised leases here have carried long minimums, and the association governs, so verify current policy before underwriting any income.
Salt-air ownership, one street back
Sitting across the Boulevard rather than on the dune line softens, but does not erase, the coastal-maintenance reality. Good associations budget for balconies, glazing, and roofs on real replacement cycles, which is why the reserve study is the document that matters most in your diligence.
The PLAYERS week
TPC Sawgrass is about ten minutes away, and tournament week transforms the corridor: traffic, energy, and the best house-guest week of the year, with the Lodge next door for overflow rooms. The concierge desk earns its keep that week.
Storm posture
Coastal means taking wind and flood seriously even one street back: rated glazing or shutters, an elevation-aware insurance package, and an association with a real storm protocol. Ask how the building fared in recent storm seasons; the answers are documented and worth hearing.
Five Costly Mistakes Carlyle Buyers Make
Small-building service condos generate their own specific errors. The five we see:
Assuming the Lodge comes with the deed
It does not. The Lodge & Club is a separate membership, and what conveys varies by listing; some sales have included an initiation, most underwriting should assume none. Get the answer in writing before it prices your offer.
Buying the word concierge without reading the budget
A staffed desk is a payroll line the association carries every year. Read the budget and reserves behind the fee, and confirm desk hours and scope, before the service premium prices your unit.
Paying oceanfront money for across-the-street position
Top-floor ocean glimpses are real, but the building is west of the Boulevard. Comp it against Carlyle trades and the corridor, not against Windemere and The Hallmark on the dune line.
Assuming rental income
The building is run as a residence, and advertised leases have carried long minimum terms. Verify current rental minimums and approval requirements in writing before underwriting a dollar of income.
Anchoring to stale comps
The December 2025 corner sale near $790 per square foot is a different market than the 2020-2021 trades in the $700Ks. In a 47-unit building, one renovated sale moves the curve; price off the right vintage of comp.
Plans, View Sides, and Where Value Hides
The corner-and-condition ladder
Carlyle prices climb two ladders at once: plan position and renovation vintage. Corners with ocean-and-lagoon exposure on upper floors are the trophy tier, and the December 2025 sale proved what a designer renovation adds there. The inefficiency worth hunting is the well-kept north-side unit with the lake and marsh view: most of the building's service value at a meaningful discount to the corners.
The trap is paying corner money for corner position with 1995 interiors. The desk downstairs does not amortize a renovation.
The Carlyle Buyer Checklist
- Pull the four association documents: budget, reserve study, milestone-inspection report, and a year of board minutes.
- Confirm the current association fee and any planned or pending special assessments, in writing.
- Pin down what Lodge & Club rights convey with the specific unit, and current membership categories and pricing with the club.
- Verify rental rules before underwriting any income: minimums, approvals, and recent changes.
- Confirm concierge scope and hours so the service premium you pay matches the service you get.
- Get the unit-specific insurance quote and the master-policy summary inside your window.
- Price the renovation delta honestly against the renovated alternative, and against the right vintage of comp.
- Register your criteria early: in a 47-unit building, the watch list beats the portal.
The Carlyle buyers we see succeed decided what they were buying before they toured: services and the Lodge next door, not ocean frontage. They did the document homework in advance, nailed down what membership rights conveyed, and moved within days when the right side of the building listed.
The ones we see lose comped the building against the dune-line regimes, or let the word concierge stand in for reading the budget that pays for it. The desk downstairs is wonderful. Somebody in the deal still has to read the reserve study.
The Carlyle vs. the Boulevard Set
The realistic cross-shop is the gated condo addresses along this stretch of Ponte Vedra Beach:
| Community | Format | The honest one-liner |
|---|---|---|
| Windemere | Elevator oceanfront, 36 units | True dune-line frontage inside the Beach Club gates; no concierge. |
| The Hallmark | 12-unit oceanfront boutique | Full-floor oceanfront exclusivity; even scarcer, and pricier per foot. |
| Sea Hammock | Low-rise oceanfront | On the sand south on the Boulevard, without the service layer. |
| Ocean Grande | Gated condos, south corridor | Gated and amenitized near the Serenata stretch, a different price point. |
| Serenata Beach | Gated oceanfront, south A1A | Resort-style amenities at a longer drive from the Boulevard core. |
The Carlyle's lane: the only staffed-concierge building in its tier, with two garage spaces, storage, the Lodge next door, and a lower price per square foot than the dune-line regimes. If services and lock-and-leave security outrank frontage on your list, the comparison ends here.
The Honest Pros and Cons
Pros
- The only staffed concierge desk in this PVB condo tier
- Two garage spaces plus private storage per unit
- Gated, interior-hallway building security
- The Lodge & Club next door; beach across the street
- No CDD; one association line to underwrite
- 47-unit scarcity on a zero-new-supply corridor
Cons
- Not oceanfront; views are over or around the Lodge
- 1995-era building: renovation and reserve diligence required
- Lodge & Club access is separate membership, not a deed right
- Service-building fee structure; the desk is a payroll line
- Rental flexibility limited; long minimums, verify first
- Thin inventory; patience is mandatory
Our Carlyle Buyer Playbook
How we run a Carlyle purchase, in order:
- Decide the format first: services-and-Lodge versus dune-line frontage is the real choice; settle it before a listing forces it.
- Do the document homework in advance: we keep current association intel so you can move in days, not weeks.
- Pin down the Lodge question early: what conveys, what membership costs today, and what the waitlist looks like.
- Register the criteria: view side, floor, condition tolerance, and price ceiling, with the agents who work this building.
- Negotiate on condition and comp vintage, not on hope: the renovation delta and the right comps are your leverage, use them precisely.
Questions We Ask Before You Sign
Six answers we get in writing on every Carlyle contract:
- What is the current fee, and what budget, including the concierge payroll, sits behind it?
- What do the reserve study and milestone inspection say, and what is funded versus planned?
- Are any special assessments pending or discussed in the last year of minutes?
- What Lodge & Club rights, if any, convey with this unit, and what does membership cost today?
- What are the rental rules today, and have they changed recently?
- What did comparable plans and view sides actually trade for, renovation-adjusted?
Is The Carlyle Not For You?
The honest cut, both directions:
Consider elsewhere if you want
- True oceanfront with the dune outside your rail
- New-construction finishes and warranties
- Resort amenities owned by your building, not a club next door
- Flexible short-term rental income
- Deep inventory to tour this weekend
- A house with a yard
The Carlyle fits if you want
- A staffed concierge and a gate watching the building
- Two garage spaces, storage, and interior hallways
- The Lodge & Club as your resort wing, by membership
- The beach as a two-minute walk, not a flood-zone line item on the dune
- No CDD and one clean fee line
- A scarce service asset on a zero-new-supply corridor
